Board of Directors
Director data appears once the latest DEF 14A has been processed through the director-extraction pass.
Risk-factor diff
FY 2025 10-K vs. FY 2024Net-new paragraphs in the most recent 10-K's Item 1A. Companies rarely add risk language without a real reason — additions here are often a leading signal of management concerns.
“We and our businesses are subject to a variety of risks. This section discusses material risk factors that could have a material adverse impact on our business, financial condition, results of operations, liquidity, and an investment in us. Although this section highlights key risk factors, other risks may emerge at any time, and we cannot predict all risks or estimate the extent to which they may affect us.”
“Our loan portfolios, and residual interests therein, are subject to credit risk, prepayment risk, and certain risks related to interest rates, and the derivatives we use to manage interest rate risks, each of which could reduce the expected cash flows and earnings on our portfolios.”
“Our loan portfolio is subject to credit risk, including the risk that borrowers may be unable or unwilling to repay their obligations. We estimate our allowance for loan losses using a range of quantitative and qualitative factors, including repayment and delinquency status; loan program type; historical and current default trends based on internal experience and industry data; prior loss experience; trends in claims rejected by guarantors on federally insured student loans; changes to federal student loan programs; borrower FICO scores; and current and forecasted macroeconomic conditions, inc…”
“As of December 31, 2025, 78.8% of our loan portfolio is federally guaranteed, which substantially limits our exposure to credit losses on those loans. However, our private education and consumer loan portfolios are unsecured and expose us to the full risk of loss in the event of borrower default. We are actively expanding our acquisition of private education and consumer loan portfolios, which increases our overall exposure to credit risk.”
“If defaults on loans we hold are higher than anticipated, whether due to adverse economic conditions, changes in regulatory or operating environments, inaccurate underwriting assumptions, or other unforeseen factors, or if actual credit performance is significantly worse than our estimates, we may be required to increase our allowance for loan losses. Many of our consumer loans, including Pay Later receivables, are underwritten, serviced, and collected by third-parties that we do not control. Any increase in defaults would result in higher provisions for loan losses and could materially and ad…”
Policies & disclosures
Clawback, anti-hedging, stock ownership, and related-party policies will populate from extracted proxy sections.